Independent Reviews · No Brand Deals · 500+ Nibs Tested

I Review Fountain Pens Like a Product Designer — Because I Am One

My name is Alex Chen. By day I work as a product designer, evaluating objects for build quality, ergonomics, material choices, and long-term durability. By night (and early morning, and most weekends) I’m deep in the fountain pen rabbit hole — a place I fell into ten years ago and have never tried to climb out of.

That professional lens changes how I review a pen. When I pick up a TWSBI Eco, I’m not just asking “does it write well?” — I’m looking at the piston tolerances, the section taper geometry, whether the clip design distributes stress evenly or will crack after two years of pocket carry. When a Pelikan M800 costs six times a Pilot Custom 74, I want to understand exactly what you’re paying for in terms of materials, fit, and finish. Most reviews skip that part. This site doesn’t.

How I Fell In

The origin story is embarrassingly common: I bought a Lamy Safari on a whim, expected to feel nothing, and immediately needed to understand everything about how a nib worked. Within six months I owned fourteen pens. Within a year I had a spreadsheet. A decade later, the spreadsheet has over 200 entries and I’ve tested pens across every price bracket from $6 Jinhao starters to vintage Pelikan 100Ns that took two years of searching to find.

The collection spans Pelikan, Pilot, TWSBI, Lamy, vintage Sheaffers and Parkers, and a particular obsession with Japanese flex nib pens — pre-war Pilots, old Platinum flexi nibs, the occasional Sailor that never made it outside Japan. Each pen has a story. Most of them are still inked.

My Testing Methodology

I don’t publish impressions. I publish test results. Every pen I review gets the same process:

For inks, I maintain a personal database of 80+ inks tested for dry time, sheen, water resistance, and feathering behavior across five paper types. That database feeds directly into ink reviews on this site — so when I say a particular Diamine ink has moderate water resistance, there’s actual drop-test data behind the claim, not a vibe.

Why nibguide.com Exists

When I started getting serious, the information online was scattered. Forum threads from 2009, YouTube reviews with no repeatable methodology, opinion pieces that assumed you already knew what a JIS nib was. I wanted a resource that treated beginners like adults — clear enough for someone picking up their first pen, deep enough to satisfy collectors who’ve been at this for decades.

That’s the mission: make fountain pens genuinely accessible without dumbing anything down.

What You’ll Find Here

Community

I’ve been active on the Fountain Pen Network forum for eight years — long enough to have watched the beginner questions cycle around and notice which answers actually stick. If you’ve gotten advice there from a user who’s obsessively precise about paper testing, there’s a chance that was me.

I also host a quarterly pen meetup in San Francisco. We typically get 30 to 40 people together to trade ink samples, write with each other’s pens, and have the broad-vs-fine debate for the hundredth time. If you’re in the Bay Area and want an invitation to the next one, send me a note.

Editorial Independence

I buy every pen and ink I review with my own money unless clearly disclosed otherwise. No sponsorships, no affiliate arrangements that influence ratings, no manufacturer review units that come with strings attached. The design background means I care about craft — and that means I’m not going to tell you something is well-built when it isn’t, regardless of who made it.

By the Numbers

10 Years in the hobby  |  200+ Pens tested  |  80+ Inks in the database  |  5 Paper Types in every ink test  |  Quarterly SF Meetup host

Let’s Talk Pens

I love hearing from readers — whether you’re picking your first fountain pen and feeling overwhelmed, or you’ve been collecting for twenty years and want to debate the merits of vintage Pelikan feeds. Questions, feedback, review requests — all of it is welcome.

Always happy to talk pens — [email protected]